“This meeting marks the first time SLAS will hold our annual meeting in D.C.,” notes Tom Manning,
the organization’s director of marketing communications. Formed only four years ago by the merger of the Society for Biomolecular Sciences (SBS) and
the Association for Laboratory Automation (ALA), the organization has quickly become the launching pad for what’s new in lab automation and screening.
“We are excited about D.C. for a number of reasons,” Manning states, and lists off a few: “The location is easily accessible for much of
the U.S. and is within driving distance for many East Coast residents. Furthermore, the D.C. location should enable more government scientists—often
constrained by travel and training expenses—to participate in SLAS2015.”

In 2014, SLAS, headquartered
near Chicago, set in motion a multiyear rotation between San Diego (even-number years) and D.C. (odd-number years) as the host city for the society’s
flagship annual event.

San Diego readily attracts the biotechnology community, notes SLAS President Daniel Sipes,
who represents that community in his “day job” with the Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation, where he is the director of
advanced automation technologies. In addition to government types, Sipes adds that Big Pharma and European representatives are likely to find the East Coast
location convenient.

Sipes notes that since the merger of the SBS and the ALA four years ago to form SLAS, the
annual meeting has been structured with three pillars: education, exhibits and community. Many attendees, he observes, come principally for one of the three,
particularly the exhibits, but post-event surveys have indicated all three aspects rate highly with attendees.

In
terms of “education,” which we at DDNews tend to focus on in these show previews, SLAS2015 will feature 140 podium presentations across
seven educational tracks, which are: Assay Development and Screening, Automation and High-Throughput Technologies, Bioanalytical Techniques, Biomarker
Discovery and Applications, Drug Target Strategies, Micro- and Nanotechnologies and, finally, Informatics.

Interested parties can see presentation and session details for the items above and others, as well as the latest
version of the scientific program, on the SLAS2015 Event Scheduler at www.eventscribe.com/2015/SLAS2015/

Special
Sessions are also a highlight of the scientific program, Manning notes.

“Three unique Special Sessions have
been curated especially for SLAS2015,” he observes. “Each of these includes multiple presentations focused on the broader theme of the session.
Special Sessions at SLAS2015 include: European Government/Foundation Drug Discovery Collaboration; The Commercialization of New Technologies: From Ideas to
Reality (presented by the SLAS Journal of Laboratory Automation); and An Evening with NIH, which will be moderated by Chris Austin, director of the
National Center for the Advancement of Translational Sciences.”

Keynote presenters include Dr. Donald
Ingber, Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology, professor of bioengineering and founding director of the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired
Engineering at Harvard University, who will address SLAS2015 on Monday, Feb. 9, as well as NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins on Wednesday, Feb. 11, and Laurie
Garrett, author and noted authority on global health issues on Wednesday night.

And then there is the
“exhibit” part of the three pillars of SLAS meetings, which Manning calls “another highlight.”

“We expect more than 300 exhibiting companies,” he says. “In addition to traditional booths, many companies are also delivering
Exhibitor Tutorials, thereby adding to the technical education SLAS2015 attendees are eligible to receive. The exhibit hall will also host our traditional
SLAS Innovation AveNEW, which is a segment of the show floor featuring eight start-up companies from around the globe with especially notable
technologies. As Innovation AveNEW participants, these companies received complimentary exhibit space and other in-kind support as part of
SLAS’ mission to nurture scientific technology innovation.”

“Intelligent Network Building is
another cornerstone of this annual event,” Manning notes, bringing in the third pillar of “community,” which often revolves around meals,
receptions and other events that facilitate attendee interaction. “A highlight of our networking lineup is the Tuesday evening event at the Smithsonian
National Air & Space Museum,” he states.

The Career Connections offerings have also been enhanced for
SLAS2015. This programming includes career-focused workshops, the opportunity for individual resume review, interview training, a job board and mentoring
opportunities with professional scientists and researchers local to D.C. Similarly, a robust lineup of education and networking for students and early career
professionals is also on tap.

Step out along Innovation
AveNEW

WASHINGTON, D.C.—Innovation AveNEW has become something of “a
traditional highlight” of the annual SLAS Conference and Exhibition, according to the SLAS. Through this program, SLAS provides startup companies with
exposure and prestige by granting complimentary exhibit space and in-kind support that enables the company’s participation at the SLAS annual meeting.
Innovation AveNEW participants are selected by a committee of SLAS volunteers that judges applicants based on a set of criteria that includes the
impact of the technology, commercial viability and potential impact on the field of laboratory automation and technology.

SLAS congratulates the following eight companies from four different countries that will represent Innovation AveNEW at SLAS2015:

Ceres Nanosciences in Manassas, Va., is a privately held life-sciences company engaged in the research, development and commercialization
of innovative sample preparation products based on its proprietary Nanotrap technology, which captures, enriches and preserves analytes/biomarkers.

Creoptix in Wadenswil, Switzerland, goes for “high-sensitivity meets label-free by offering best-in-class biosensor devices for the most
demanding applications in life-sciences research and drug discovery.”

Electrospinning in Oxfordshire, U.K, was launched in 2010 to
develop products utilizing the world-class electrospinning platform at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Oxfordshire.

InnoCyte in
Stuttgart, Germany, has developed a technology that standardizes, automates, accelerates and therefore significantly simplifies and reduces the cost of
producing biological cells.

Microscopy Innovations in Marshfield, Wis., is a life-sciences tools company founded in 2007 to create novel
products for microscopy laboratories.

SiTOOLS in Bavaria, Germany, provides novel tools for RNA interference around siPOOLs, which are complex
pools of accurately defined siRNAs, which show efficient and robust target gene knockdown to reduce off-target effects and deliver clean and reliable
phenotypic data.

StackWave in Louisville, Ky., comprises a team of software developers skilled in biotech and pharmaceutical software
systems integration.

Telos Scientific in San Diego bridges the gap between science and engineering to make laboratory automation user-
friendly, highly functional and bottom-line productive.

SLAS invites you to stop by Innovation AveNEW in the SLAS2015
Exhibition to visit with these companies and see the technologies that earned them this important distinction.

Keynote addresses at SLAS2015

With a theme
of focusing on leveraging science to advance the health of humankind, the keynote addresses at SLAS2015 will cover issues that range from biomimetic micro
systems that feature “organ-on-a-chip” technology to global health issues.

Monday, Feb. 9, 9
a.m.

Donald E. Ingber, M.D., Ph.D.

Founding director of the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired
Engineering at Harvard University, Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical School and Boston Children’s Hospital and professor
of bioengineering at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

Dr. Donald Ingber is a founder of the emerging field of
biologically inspired engineering, and at the Wyss Institute, he oversees a multifaceted effort to identify the mechanisms that living organisms use to
self-assemble from molecules and cells and to apply these design principles to develop advanced materials and devices for healthcare and to improve
sustainability. He has made major contributions to mechanobiology, tissue engineering, tumor angiogenesis, systems biology and nanobiotechnology. He has
authored more than 375 publications and 85 patents, and has received numerous honors, including the Holst Medal, Pritzker Award from the Biomedical
Engineering Society, Rous-Whipple Award from the American Society for Investigative Pathology, Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society of In Vitro
Biology, and the Department of Defense Breast Cancer Innovator Award.

Wednesday, Feb. 11, 8:30 a.m.

Francis Collins, M.D., Ph.D.

Director of the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH)

As
the head of the NIH, Dr. Francis S. Collins oversees the work of the largest supporter of biomedical research in the world, spanning the spectrum from basic
to clinical research. Collins is a physician-geneticist noted for his landmark discoveries of disease genes and his leadership of the international Human
Genome Project, which culminated in April 2003 with the completion of a finished sequence of the human DNA instruction book. He served as director of the
National Human Genome Research Institute at the NIH from 1993 to 2008. Before coming to the NIH, Dr. Collins was a Howard Hughes Medical Institute
investigator at the University of Michigan. He is an elected member of the Institute of Medicine and the National Academy of Sciences, was awarded the
Presidential Medal of Freedom in November 2007 and received the National Medal of Science in 2009.

Wednesday, Feb.
11, 3:45 p.m.

Laurie Garrett

Author, journalist and authority on global health issues

Laurie Garrett is one of America’s leading commentators on global health issues. She is the only person to win the three P’s of
journalism: The Pulitzer Prize, the Peabody Award and the Polk Award. She is a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations and is the
bestselling author of The Coming Plague and Betrayal of Trust. She has written for Foreign Affairs, Esquire and The Washington
Post, and has appeared frequently on television shows, such as “Nightline,” “Charlie Rose” and “Oprah.” Garrett also
served as a script consultant to Contagion, the film directed by Steven Soderbergh and starring Matt Damon. Garrett is a former president and now a
member of the National Association of Science Writers, and has been awarded three honorary PhDs. Garrett’s long-awaited third book, now in stores, is
called I Heard the Sirens Scream: How Americans Responded to the 9/11 and Anthrax Attacks.

Special Sessions at SLAS2015

SLAS2015 will
feature a series of special sessions, each comprised of multiple presentations dedicated to especially timely and relevant topical areas.

European governmental and charity agencies are enabling the translation of
academic discovery into health benefits of economic value by funding the creation of several novel models and approaches to drug discovery. These initiatives
have included the development of new compound libraries, the establishment of academic screening centers and the formation of innovative partnerships with
industry. Speakers in this special session explore the interaction of these initiatives with academia and pharma, and describe the anticipated benefit of
these programs in terms of bringing novel projects into the clinic. Presentations include:

Session Chairs: Dean Ho, University of California, Los Angeles and Edward Chow, National
University of Singapore

Topics covered in this session include the process of commercialization and challenges that, when overcome,
catalyze the ability to transition a product or technology from benchtop innovation to lasting commercial impact. Presentations include:

Join Chris Austin, director of the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences,
as he chairs a special evening event focused on the array of programs, services and capabilities of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and how to best
navigate the organization. Presentations include:

Touted as “one of the select few highly
discreet, automated employment programs that brings together its online professional services with its respected career center and development sessions at
the annual meeting,” SLAS invites attendees to take advantage of SLAS Career Connections offerings, which include free career development
workshops.

One of these workshops is “Mock Interviews: Preparation and Practice for Getting the Jobs You
Want” by Dr. Daniel J. Eustace, a professor at the University of Connecticut. Held Tuesday, Feb. 10, from 7 a.m. to 8:15 a.m. (breakfast will be
served), this interactive workshop invites audience members to play active roles participating in, providing feedback for and perhaps coaching how to manage
different kinds of interview scenarios.

All attendees should bring their current resumes to the workshop and be
prepared to actively participate. Attendees will learn by doing, by watching others interview, by discussing alternate approaches and by internalizing how
one would perform if they were in the situation.

In addition, Prof. Eustace provides one-on-one and group career
counseling sessions by appointment at the SLAS Member Center Monday, Feb. 9, and Tuesday, Feb. 10. Contact Mary Geismann at mgeismann@slas.org to schedule
your appointment.

The other three of the four career development workshops are being presented by Dr. Joanne
Kamens, executive director of Addgene, who will cover networking, choosing a lab and transitioning from academia to industry.

“Not Networking 101—Building Relationships for Success,” will be held Monday, Feb. 9, from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. (breakfast will be
served). As described by SLAS: Networking has gotten a really bad name these days. I take your card, you take my card and then we don’t call each
other. This workshop is designed to reintroduce you to how strong professional relationships can be necessary for most people to succeed in their careers. It
will provide practical tools for meeting people and for nurturing new and established connections.

Kamens will
conduct “Smooth transitions—Top 10 List: Things Scientists Ask About Finding an Industry Job” on Monday, Feb. 9, from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30
p.m., and attendees are asked to bring a box lunch if they need one. SLAS says of this workshop: These days, staying in academia is really the
“alternative” career for scientists. The majority of young scientists will not end up in a traditional academic research position. This
presentation will give attendees some criteria to consider in deciding if embarking on an industry science career is right for you, and then will provide
concrete tools and resources for preparing for this transition.

The third of Kamens' presentation is
“How to Choose Your Next Lab” on Tuesday, Feb. 10, from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m., again with the suggestion to bring a box lunch.
As for
the SLAS take on this workshop: For some reasons, grad students and post-docs don’t seem to see a lab choice as a major career decision. Nothing could
be farther from the truth. You will spend four to seven years working for one person in a small group—don’t you think this is worth a little
pre-work to make sure it will be a good fit and get you close to where you want to go in the future? This presentation will give you practical tips for what
to look for and how to find it when choosing a new lab for your research. A must-hear for all young scientists.

Networking opportunities for every lifestyle

Attendees at SLAS2015
represent “a unique nexus of diverse interests that fosters the limitless potential of global collaboration,” says the SLAS website, adding,
“The value of time spent in world-class educational sessions at SLAS2015 is rivaled by time spent meeting speakers, exhibitors and other conference
participants.” From hoisting a pint at a local pub to beginning the day with a 4.2-mile run, the menu of social activities offers a broad array of
opportunities for attendees to get to know each other and continue conversations that could lead—who knows?—to the next Nobel Prize.

Fasten
your seat belts, put your networking goals in an upright position and feel free to move about the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. Meet, greet and
celebrate the right stuff at one of the Top 10 Coolest Museums in Washington, D.C., as SLAS continues its tradition of presenting a memorable final evening
fete to commemorate this annual gathering of our global community.

Watch the 30-minute movie, “To Space and Back,” in the museum’s planetarium theater

Connect with your fellow
scientific professionals

The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum maintains the world’s largest and most significant
collection of aviation and space artifacts, including the 1903 Wright Flyer, Charles Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis, the Apollo 11 Command Module
Columbia and a lunar rock you can touch, but not toss.

Complimentary and continuous shuttle bus service is
provided between the Marriott Marquis and the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum from 6:45 p.m. to 10:15 p.m. (10 minute travel time). All guests must have an
SLAS2015 badge and be 21 or older.

Where Everybody Knows Your Name: The SLAS2015 Corner
Bars

Wear your SLAS2015 badge to these nearby hot spots, then kick back and enjoy exclusive SLAS-only discounts on eats and
drinks.

Baby Wale

10 percent off all food and drinks. Adjacent to the Marriott Marquis,
the Baby Wale offers tasty and creative small plates, entrees and a complete bar menu. Location: 1124 9th St. NW (Closed Sunday, Feb. 9)

City Tap House

10 percent off all drinks. In the same block as the Renaissance, the City Tap House
offers a full bar headlined with craft brews from around the world, brick-oven pizzas and elevated pub fare (Discounts do not apply to food). Location: 901
9th Street NW

On Your Mark, Get Set, Go!

Start your Monday morning with a brisk
run or walk along with your friends from Promega and Gilson. This 4.2 mi/6.8 km Sunrise Run takes you past the U.S. Capitol, Washington Monument, Lincoln
Memorial and White House. Runners and walkers depart from the Marriot Marquis lobby at 6:30 a.m. sharp. (The Sunrise Run presented by Promega and Gilson is
an optional event, not an official SLAS2015 function.)

Students and Early Career Professionals: Ready,
Aim, Roll!

After the exhibits close on Sunday, all students and early-career professionals are invited to roll over to the nearby
Lucky Strike for bowling, networking and cajoling. Get to know others who, like you, will drive the world’s next wave of scientific innovation. Enjoy
glow-in-the-dark lanes, a state-of-the-art sound system and tournament-quality billiard tables. SLAS picks up the tab for bowling lane rentals, bowling
shoes, delicious light bites and soft drinks. A cash bar is available for those 21 and older.

Home Away
From Home: The Global Village

Visitors from outside the U.S. have a designated rendezvous point in the SLAS2015 Exhibit
Hall’s Global Village. Meet others from your part of the world, meet the leaders who serve on the SLAS Asia Council and SLAS Europe Council and meet
members of the SLAS professional team.

SLAS Member Center

The SLAS Member Center is the headquarters for career services at SLAS2015. Job seekers and employers are invited to browse
job postings in the newly redesigned interactive Career Connections Center, post resumes and sign up for a one-on-one career coaching session with a
professional career counselor. To request a personal coaching session, contact Mary Geismann at mgeismann@slas.org.

The SLAS says its Member Center is the place for members and nonmembers alike to learn everything there is to know about the many year-round
benefits and services available through SLAS.

In addition, in the Member Center you can receive a guided tour of
SLAS.org, a review of your SLAS member benefits and participate in some giveaways.

From two, one

CHICAGO—In early 2009, the Society for Biomolecular Sciences (SBS) and
the Association for Laboratory Automation (ALA) began discussing ways the organizations could work together to further their respective missions. These
discussions led SBS and ALA to recognize that coordinating programs and activities offered many significant advantages. Accordingly, SBS and ALA assigned a
task force of eight experienced volunteer leaders, to determine the viability of an SBS-ALA affiliation. The team quickly and unanimously concluded that both
SBS and ALA could be strengthened by merging into a new entity that advanced their common missions and goals while respecting and protecting their unique
individual histories and identities.

The Society for Laboratory Automation and Screening (SLAS) was officially
launched on May 5, 2010 in a merger of the Association for Laboratory Automation and the Society for Biomolecular Sciences. SLAS is a global organization
that exists to provide forums for education and information exchange to encourage the study of, and improve the science and practice of, laboratory
automation and screening.

Mirroring its organizational genesis, the society is comprised of a Biomolecular
Sciences Section that exists to advance SLAS’s exempt goals with respect to the science and technology of drug discovery and the use and development of
biomolecular screening technology. Likewise, the Laboratory Automation Section strives to further science and education related to laboratory automation, and
in particular by encouraging and advancing the study and improving the practice of laboratory automation.

SLAS is
headquartered in St. Charles, Ill., a suburb of Chicago, and has offices in Shanghai and Brussels. It publishes the Journal of Laboratory Automation
and the Journal of Biomolecular Screening in partnership with SAGE Publications.